Jump to content
SASS Wire Forum

Trailrider #896

Members
  • Posts

    7,669
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Trailrider #896

  1. New Years Day 1969 it was -52 deg. F. in Great Falls, and there was NO WIND! Couple of years later I heard (left the end of that January for Colorado) it was -54 deg. F.! With a wind chill thrown in, at -60, try manipulating the controls of a Swiss-made theodolite surveying in a Minuteman I Launch Facility! :o 

    Cheer up. In another six months we'll all be complaining about the heat! :rolleyes:

    • Like 3
  2. When some people ask to be called on the telephone, some may still say, "Dial such-and-such a number." Fourteen years ago, when my grandchild and our daughter, son-in-law and my wife went to a museum, my s-i-l lifted the kid up and showed how to operate a dial phone. I ask every once-in-a-while if the kid remembers how to do it. You never know when you might need to use one in an emergency!  And most of the even-high-level school systems don't teach cursive handwriting. (Oddly, the Chicago public schools did teach it seventy-odd years ago, but the suburban schools didn't!

  3. Regardless of the care you received from your furry friend, how up to date is your tetanus shot? I'd not be so worried about bacteria from your dog, but what might have been picked up when you dragged the branches through the dirt. I get a booster every ten years, unless I cut myself on something dragged through the dirt. And, no, it isn't just something rusty that can be a problem.  In the CW, more people died of lockjaw (tetanus) in the Eastern theaters than the West because the ground in the more-settled East tended to have more of the bacillus from cattle and horses. 

    • Like 1
  4. Just showed what American ingenuity and hard work could accomplish in a very short time. Look what was done to the Yorktown after the Coral Sea in just 72 hours! But what they didn't mention in the newsreel was the absence of the carriers at Pearl Harbor on December 7.  That alone spelled defeat for the Japanese at Midway and later. God Bless them all, and RIP! :FlagAm:

    • Like 2
  5. In the movie, "Master and Commander", the British ship engages the French ship, but finds the guns are not effective against the American-built French frigate's hull. The British captain orders his gunners to aim for the French masts and rigging, as the French hull was apparently of the same live oak as the Constitution!

    • Like 1
  6. 2 hours ago, J-BAR #18287 said:


     

    Yup.  That's a lieutenant.

    Worse yet. With a map! (Of course, I had one...still have it...showed what roads to take to 220 Launch Control Facilities and Launch Facilities in Montana.) 

    • Like 1
  7. 1 minute ago, Rye Miles #13621 said:

    No only the actual flapper would be subject to a full auto ban and I have yet to see one anywhere .

    In case more fire(power) is needed, break glass! :rolleyes:

    • Haha 1
  8. 28 minutes ago, Trailrider #896 said:

    "Planetary Defense, Guardian Aimless speaking, Sir!"

    "Guardian, this is the Deep Space Observation site! We have indications that the Romulans are about to land at Site Bravo-Two-Six. I've tried calling the President, but he's on vacation. The Veep is unavailable! I tried calling the Secretary of Defense, but he's in the ICU. Who's your duty officer?"

    "Uh, that'd be 2LT Jones. Just a minute an' I'll get him."

    (Pause) "Second Lieutenant Jones, here. You told Aimless the Romulans are about to land at Site Bravo-Two-Six? I'm not sure where that is...Wait, I'll check my map!"

    (Deep breath on the other end of the line.) "Say, lieutenant, who's minding the store?"

    "Store? What store?" :rolleyes:

    Time: 0720 Local  Date: 7 December 2324.

    Lieutenant thinks a minute, then adds: "Yeah, well we need confirmation.  Don't worry about it." :o

    • Sad 1
  9. "Planetary Defense, Guardian Aimless speaking, Sir!"

    "Guardian, this is the Deep Space Observation site! We have indications that the Romulans are about to land at Site Bravo-Two-Six. I've tried calling the President, but he's on vacation. The Veep is unavailable! I tried calling the Secretary of Defense, but he's in the ICU. Who's your duty officer?"

    "Uh, that'd be 2LT Jones. Just a minute an' I'll get him."

    (Pause) "Second Lieutenant Jones, here. You told Aimless the Romulans are about to land at Site Bravo-Two-Six? I'm not sure where that is...Wait, I'll check my map!"

    (Deep breath on the other end of the line.) "Say, lieutenant, who's minding the store?"

    "Store? What store?" :rolleyes:

    • Haha 2
  10. 13 hours ago, DocWard said:

     

    Psssttt.... F6F Hellcat. Sure you knew that, accidents happen. Coincidentally, I have one on my model table I'm building at the moment.

    Oops! Typist error. :rolleyes: The F6F Hellcat was another great product of the "Long Island Boiler Works", aka Grumman. Used to see a bunch of them and other WWII Navy aircraft sitting inside a fence at Chicago Vocational School on the South Side, where they were used to train aircraft mechanics. 

    • Like 3
  11. 3 hours ago, Griff said:

    Flames are not really a problem per se when emitted from the cylinder gap at the front of the cylinder... It can be a indicator of a problem... But, it's when it also spits lead that you have a serious problem.

    And if it is spitting jacket material from USAF .38 Special ball ammo from a Navy reject M10 it is time to reschedule your annual qualification and go to the local gun store and buy a M19 to qualify with! Which is what I did in 1967! :o:P

  12. When they crossbred with European wild boar as happened in parts of Tennessee and Alabama, you get a really nasty critter. Got a pair of the heads on my wall from a trip to Central Tennessee back in '63! Great eating, if you marinate them. No bacon on them, however, especially the more pure "Roosians"! Took one with a .30-06 at about 5 yards in heavy brush! The other one with a .33 WCF at abut 25 yards.

    Happy New Year, Pards!

    • Like 2
  13. One each, 7-1/2" OMV and 5-1/2" OMV, both with convertible cylinders .44-40 and .44 Extra-Long Russian (aka .44 Mangle-em). Haven't been shooting for a couple of years, but hope to get back into it when the weather gets a bit warmer (but not too warm!). 

    Happy, Healthy and Safe New Year, Pards!

    Your obedient servant,

    Trailrider

  14. Before (in China) and in the early part of WWII, the Zero had the advantage over most allied fighters. It had a powerful engine, was very light and maneuverable. The light weight came at the expense of no self-sealing gas tanks and no armor protection for the pilot. In addition, the skill level of the pilots was very high. Only the best Japanese graduated from pilot training, particularly the Navy pilots. The Zero or Zeke as it was later called, could out-climb and out-turn our fighters. To dogfight with a Zero was inviting death! Fortunately, we learned quickly to utilize the best features of our fighters to counter the Zero's advantages. You didn't dogfight, if you could avoid it. You picked a target, got above it if possible, made one diving pass and got the hell out of there!  As thing progressed, and the F4U Corsair and F6F Bearcat came out, and the Japanese Navy lost a lot of their best pilots, even some of the improved Zeros were no match for the Marine and U.S. Navy planes and pilots. After the Mariannas Turkey Shoot, the major threat posed by the Japanese air forces were in the form of kamikaze attacks on our ships.

    Happy, Healthy and Safe New Year, Pards!

    • Like 2
  15. 12 hours ago, Subdeacon Joe said:

     

    Yeah.   I look at photos like this, nothing for miles, no trees, little water, a damp soddy, and almost endless labor.   And many had left behind established homes and communities, water and trees aplenty. 

     

    It must have been especially hard on the women.

    The West was said to be "Hell on horses and women!"

    • Like 2
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.